Your picks for the 10 most important people on Twitter in 2011

Who better to pick Twitter's top voices than Twitter users themselves?

The Daily Dot is the hometown newspaper for the Web’s varied communities. If there’s one public square, a shared space where they meet, it’s Twitter. Here are the people to watch.

We thought we'd put together a pretty good list of the most influential users on Twitter last week. But you spoke up loud and clear that we could have done better—starting with the glaring omission of women's names.

During WWII, broadcaster Edward R. Murrow was the voice millions of Americans turned to for accuracy and entertainment. During the uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya this year, that voice of comfort belonged to NPR strategist Andy Carvin. And instead of hearing the sounds of The Blitz over the radio, Americans made do with Carvin’s messages of 140 characters or less.

Carvin is a Twitter addict who used the microblogging platform to factcheck stories, translate interviews and tweet events live during the Arab Spring. His tweets during the Tunisian uprising, in particular, are a thing of legend, showing off the strengths of the platform.

“I've been able to do what I've done so far because my Twitter followers want me to succeed at this, and they're willing to lend their expertise when I need it,” Carvin told The Washington Post. “There's no shame in a journalist telling members of the public ‘I don't know’ or ‘Can you help me?’ I think journalism would be all the better if we did this more often, both online and offline.”

Breast cancer is a disease that affects hundreds of thousands of women (and men) every year.

While most people seek treatment for the disease in private, Boing Boing blogger Xeni Jardin decided to share her journey with the world.

About four weeks ago, Jardin, who at 41 is younger than most guidelines recommend for breast-cancer screening, but was motivated to seek an examination by friends’ recent diagnoses’, gave the world an intimate look into her life after she live-tweeted her mammogram. Jardin’s candid tweets inspired the Twitterverse to rally around the Internet-culture icon. In that light, her life is just one more networked object she shares with her hyperlinked audience, and we are all the richer for it.

What does it mean when a pretend news organization has one of the biggest followings on Twitter among media groups? Well, a whole lot. With an army of followers that trumps The Washington Post, Fox News, and the Associated Press, The Onion has proven itself to be a force to be reckoned with. Two months ago, a tweet about a hostage situation at the Capitol—as satirical as the rest of the Onion’s output—caused an uproar in the real world as people tried to figure out if it was a put-on. After the incident, Gelf Magazine created the Real or Onion iPhone app that asks users to decide on whether a headline is real or from The Onion. Twitter followers, though, know that the Onion is the real fake thing.

New York Times media reporter Brian Stelter’s influence is unparalleled. For Stelter, tweets are more than just a way to drive readers to the Times. They are a free-flowing narrative that provides shrewd insight, a personal look into the belly of the Times, and regular interactions with plain old Twitter folk. Whether he’s live-tweeting an Occupy Wall Street protest or reporting on the return of “Jersey Shore”, Stelter’s messages are retweeted by some of the most savvy tweeters out there. But even after three years worth of tweeting, Stelter is still refining his skills. In June Stelter accidentally left himself logged into his account on a computer at an Apple store in New York. And just last week he accidentally revealed that Christiane Amanpour would be departing as host of ABC’s “This Week” before the network, or Amanpour, had confirmed it. In both these cases Stelter quickly apologized for his mistakes, setting himself apart from an army of journalists who wouldn’t dare apologize for anything without checking with an editor first.

Journalist Maria Popova loves to pick people’s brains. She still does most of the gleaning on her successful blog Brain Pickings, but for the last four years, she’s moved some of the operation to Twitter. Nowadays, Popova primarily links to blog posts and other stories and occasionally shares her retweetable opinions on the news of the day. And when she does, as she recently did with a short film on author Maurice Sendak, she’s pretty spot on.

Back in the 1990s, Andy Borowitz was the creative force behind “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,” featuring a young Will Smith. Today, his famed show is in syndication and Borowitz has taken to Twitter where his tweets about the Republican presidential debate and Dr. Conrad Murray have left thousands of people in stitches.

In the post-WikiLeaks era, very few movements and organizations have consistently captured the world’s attention like international hacker syndicate Anonymous. From its run-ins with the Los Zetas drug cartel in Mexico to planned attacked against Fox News, Anonymous has consistently used Twitter to spread word of their attacks and support free speech and decry corporate and government meddling in media.

Anonymous has even hacked the Internet accounts of criminals in hopes of delivering a rough form of justice. About five months ago Anonymous hacked the Twitter account of Anders Behring Breivik, the man responsible for killing more than 60 people at a Norwegian youth camp in July, and deleted almost all of his messages.

(Anyone can be Anonymous, and there are many accounts on Twitter maintained in the movement’s name. But @anonymousIRC gives the movement its biggest reach.)

He’s lost part of his jaw to throat cancer. But legendary movie critic Roger Ebert still has a big mouth when it comes to movies, thanks to Twitter. He also comments on current events like the death of Kim Jong-Il and the Republican presidential debates. He usually links to posts on his own site or news clips he finds interesting.

After a long career and his prolonged fight with cancer, he’s unafraid of speaking his mind, as he did after Jackass star Ryan Dunn died in a horrific car accident, tweeting “Friends don’t let jackasses drink and drive.”

That tweet quickly circulated around the web, drawing ire from thousands of fans, including friend and costar Bam Margera. “I just lost my best friend, I have been crying hysterical for a full day and piece of shit roger ebert has the gall to put in his 2 cents,” tweeted Margera. Ebert defended his tweet in a blog post—and even though enraged “Jackass” fans briefly got his Facebook page yanked, Ebert has kept on going.

As the most popular world leader on Twitter, President Barack Obama has set himself apart from the rest. Following a live Twitter Town Hall meeting on July 6, Obama’s list of followers, and number of daily tweets, have grown exponentially. While most tweets read like a condensed press release, other have been rather poignant and at times, controversial.